• Home
  • Events
  • Exhibitions
  • Fortune and Folly in 1720
  • Selling the New World
a European- looking boy stands in a loincloth holding a war club in his right hand and a bow in his left

"Natives in Summer"

 

a diagram showing the leaf of the cacao tree and two pods as well as a cross section of a third cacao pod

The Natural History of Chocolate, and of Sugar

A large ship anchors the background of this happy scene depicting scantily clad natives willfully trading furs etcetera for bibles, mirrors, and the like
Image courtesy of The Historic New Orleans Collection

Commerce Between the Indians of Mexico and the French at the Port of Mississippi

François-Gérard Jollain (French, ca. 1660–after 1723)
ca. 1719

Evidently at the request of Indies Company backers, the engraver François-Gérard Jollain produced a poster-sized print advertising life in the new capital of Louisiana, built along the Mississippi River. As shown in this reproduced engraving, Jollain imagines New Orleans to be a welcoming tropical paradise. French settlers are shown drinking wine with Indigenous inhabitants and converting them to Christianity. At right, a pile of dead game, along with the arrival of a woman bearing textiles, allude to warm commercial relations. The lengthy text below the image informs potential settlers that natural bounty and mountain-strewn mineral riches await. In reality, the colony was a mountainless swamp whose sparse population depended on food shipments from France. Nonetheless, the print registers the extent to which French settlers relied on Native American polities such as the Biloxi tribe, who had steered them to New Orleans two decades earlier.

: View The Historic New Orleans Collection's catalog record

The New York Public Library believes that this item is in the public domain under the laws of the United States, but did not make a determination as to its copyright status under the copyright laws of other countries. This item may not be in the public domain under the laws of other countries.

Items in Selling the New World

View All Items in This Section
  • map

    Selling the New World Introduction

  • title page of the book with the seal of Great Britain in bottom center of page

    The Assiento

  • first page of the Code Noir reads Le Code Noir across top and continues in French

    The Code Noir

  • a European- looking boy stands in a loincloth holding a war club in his right hand and a bow in his left

    "Natives in Summer"

     

  • A large ship anchors the background of this happy scene depicting scantily clad natives willfully trading furs etcetera for bibles, mirrors, and the like

    Commerce Between the Indians of Mexico and the French at the Port of Mississippi

  • a diagram showing the leaf of the cacao tree and two pods as well as a cross section of a third cacao pod

    The Natural History of Chocolate, and of Sugar

  • title page of book reading: Nouvelle France ou la Description de la Louisiane

    New France, or Description of Louisiana

  • map

    Selling the New World